- Pasargadae (ancient city, Iran)
Pasargadae, first dynastic capital of the Persian Achaemenian dynasty, situated on a plain northeast of Persepolis in southwestern Iran. According to tradition, Cyrus II (the Great; reigned 559–c. 529 bce) chose the site because it lay near the scene of his victory over Astyages the Mede (550). The
- Pasaxon (Laotian newspaper)
Laos: Media and broadcasting: The largest-circulating daily newspaper is Pasaxon (“The People”), published in Vientiane; it is the official organ of the ruling party. Also published in Vientiane is the party’s quarterly journal Aloun Mai (“New Dawn”). The official news agency is Khaosan Pathet Lao (KPL). Lao National Radio broadcasts in a number of…
- Pasay (Philippines)
Pasay, city, central Luzon, Philippines, situated on the eastern shore of Manila Bay. A major residential suburb of Manila (immediately north), it is well known for the nightclubs that line the waterfront along Roxas (formerly Dewey) Boulevard. Pasay is densely populated and highly commercialized.
- PASB (international organization)
Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), organization founded in December 1902 to improve health conditions in North and South America. The organization, which is headquartered in Washington, D.C., is the oldest international health agency in the world and was the first international organization
- Pascagoula (Mississippi, United States)
Pascagoula, city, seat (1812) of Jackson county, southeastern Mississippi, U.S. It is situated on Pascagoula Bay of Mississippi Sound (an embayment of the Gulf of Mexico), at the mouth of the Pascagoula River adjacent to Moss Point (north) and Gautier (west), 21 miles (34 km) east of Biloxi. The
- Pascagoula River (river, United States)
Pascagoula: The Pascagoula River is known locally as the Singing River because of strange humming sounds audible in its vicinity. The city’s name is derived from Pasca Okla (“Bread People”), the Choctaw name for a small band of Native Americans who once lived in the area.
- pascal (unit of energy measurement)
pascal (Pa), unit of pressure and stress in the metre-kilogram-second system (the International System of Units [SI]). It was named in honour of the French mathematician-physicist Blaise Pascal (1623–62). A pascal is a pressure of one newton per square metre, or, in SI base units, one kilogram per
- Pascal (computer language)
Pascal, a computer programming language developed about 1970 by Niklaus Wirth of Switzerland to teach structured programming, which emphasizes the orderly use of conditional and loop control structures without GOTO statements. Although Pascal resembled ALGOL in notation, it provided the ability to
- pascal second per cubic metre (unit of measurement)
sound: Impedance: …per cubic metre, called an acoustic ohm, by analogy to electrical impedance.
- pascal second per metre (unit of measurement)
sound: Impedance: …per metre, often called the rayl, after Lord Rayleigh. The unit of acoustic impedance is the pascal second per cubic metre, called an acoustic ohm, by analogy to electrical impedance.
- Pascal’s law (physics)
Pascal’s principle, in fluid (gas or liquid) mechanics, statement that, in a fluid at rest in a closed container, a pressure change in one part is transmitted without loss to every portion of the fluid and to the walls of the container. The principle was first enunciated by the French scientist
- Pascal’s principle (physics)
Pascal’s principle, in fluid (gas or liquid) mechanics, statement that, in a fluid at rest in a closed container, a pressure change in one part is transmitted without loss to every portion of the fluid and to the walls of the container. The principle was first enunciated by the French scientist
- Pascal’s theorem (geometry)
projective geometry: Projective invariants: The second variant, by Pascal, as shown in the figure, uses certain properties of circles:
- Pascal’s triangle (mathematics)
Pascal’s triangle, in algebra, a triangular arrangement of numbers that gives the coefficients in the expansion of any binomial expression, such as (x + y)n. It is named for the 17th-century French mathematician Blaise Pascal, but it is far older. Chinese mathematician Jia Xian devised a triangular
- Pascal’s wager (philosophy and religion)
Pascal’s wager, practical argument for belief in God formulated by French mathematician and philosopher Blaise Pascal. In his Pensées (1657–58, see the original text here), Pascal applied elements of game theory to show that belief in the Christian religion is rational. He argued that people can
- Pascal, Blaise (French philosopher and scientist)
Blaise Pascal was a French mathematician, physicist, religious philosopher, and master of prose. He laid the foundation for the modern theory of probabilities, formulated what came to be known as Pascal’s principle of pressure, and propagated a religious doctrine that taught the experience of God
- Pascal, Carlo (Italian scholar)
textual criticism: Emendation: …in which the Italian scholar C. Pascal founded the Paravia series of editions in order to purge Latin texts of German conjectures. The best critic is he who discriminates best, whether between variants or between transmitted text and conjecture.
- Pascal, Jean (Canadian boxer)
Bernard Hopkins: In May 2011 Hopkins defeated Jean Pascal to capture the WBC light heavyweight title. By so doing, he broke George Foreman’s record and became the oldest world champion in boxing history. Hopkins bested his own mark 22 months later when he won a unanimous decision over Tavoris Cloud to become…
- Pascal, José Pedro Balmaceda (American actor)
Pedro Pascal is a Chilean-born American actor who became famous with a series of hugely popular TV shows, including Narcos (2015–17), The Mandalorian (2019– ), and The Last of Us (2023– ). He is especially known for portraying antiheroic father figures. Pedro Balmaceda (as he was originally known)
- Pascal, Pedro (American actor)
Pedro Pascal is a Chilean-born American actor who became famous with a series of hugely popular TV shows, including Narcos (2015–17), The Mandalorian (2019– ), and The Last of Us (2023– ). He is especially known for portraying antiheroic father figures. Pedro Balmaceda (as he was originally known)
- Pascali’s Island (film by Dearden [1988])
Ben Kingsley: (1983), Turtle Diary (1985), and Pascali’s Island (1988). He was nominated for a best supporting actor Oscar for his performance as Meyer Lansky in the Las Vegas crime drama Bugsy (1991). In the 1990s he also played a child’s chess coach in Searching for Bobby Fischer (1993), a Jewish accountant…
- Pascali’s Island (novel by Unsworth)
English literature: Fiction: …from the Ottoman Empire (Pascali’s Island [1980], The Rage of the Vulture [1982]) to Venice in its imperial prime and its decadence (Stone Virgin [1985]) and northern England in the 14th century (Morality Play [1995]). Patrick O’Brian attracted an ardent following with his series of meticulously researched novels about…
- Pascaline (technology)
Pascaline, the first calculator or adding machine to be produced in any quantity and actually used. The Pascaline was designed and built by the French mathematician-philosopher Blaise Pascal between 1642 and 1644. It could only do addition and subtraction, with numbers being entered by manipulating
- Pascendi Dominici Gregis (encyclical by Pius X)
Modernism: …X in the papal encyclical Pascendi Dominici Gregis and in the decree Lamentabili Sane Exitu prepared by the Curia’s Holy Office and confirmed by Pius X. In order to ensure enforcement, the priest-scholar Umberto Benigni organized, through personal contacts with theologians, a nonofficial group of censors who would report to…
- Pasch, Lorentz, the Younger (Danish painter)
Western painting: Scandinavia: Another was Lorentz Pasch the Younger, who trained under Pilo in Copenhagen, although he subsequently worked mainly in Sweden. Other painters of Swedish origin were Alexander Roslin, who worked throughout Europe, and Georg Desmarées, who settled in Bavaria. The Scandinavian Rococo has a distinctive flavour that is…
- Pasch, Moritz (German mathematician)
mathematics: The foundations of geometry: …successfully was the German mathematician Moritz Pasch, who argued in 1882 that the mistake had been to rely too heavily on physical intuition. In his view an argument in mathematics should depend for its validity not on the physical interpretation of the terms involved but upon purely formal criteria. Indeed,…
- Pascha (holiday)
Easter, principal festival of the Christian church, which celebrates the Resurrection of Jesus Christ on the third day after his Crucifixion. The earliest recorded observance of an Easter celebration comes from the 2nd century, though the commemoration of Jesus’ Resurrection probably occurred
- Pascha, Het (work by Vondel)
Joost van den Vondel: Het Pascha (1612; “The Passover”), a dramatization of the Exodus of the Jews from Egypt, was his most important early work, in which the power and splendour of his verse is already apparent. This play was an allegory for the Calvinists who had fled from…
- Paschal (antipope)
Paschal (I) was an antipope against both the rival antipope Theodore and the legitimate pope St. Sergius I during 687. After the death of Pope Conon in September 687, the Roman populace proceeded to enthrone both Paschal, then an archdeacon, and the archpriest Theodore. No agreement could be
- Paschal (antipope)
Paschal (III) was an antipope from 1164 to 1168. Against Pope Alexander III, he was one of the original supporters of the antipope Victor IV, whom he succeeded on April 22, 1164, becoming the second antipope set up by the Holy Roman emperor Frederick I Barbarossa. Elected through the influence of
- Paschal candle
Easter: Liturgical observances: …of lights focused on the Paschal candle; the service of lessons called the prophecies; the administration of the sacraments of baptism and confirmation to adult converts; and the Easter mass. The use of the Paschal candle, to denote the appearance of light out of darkness through the Resurrection, was first…
- Paschal controversies (Christianity)
Paschal controversies, in the Christian Church, disputes concerning the correct date for observing Easter (Greek Pascha). The earliest controversy was over the question of whether Easter should always be celebrated on a Sunday or on the actual day of the Jewish lunar month (14th of Nisan) on which
- Paschal I, Saint (pope)
Saint Paschal I ; feast day May 14) was the pope from 817 to 824. A priest who had served in the Curia, Paschal was an abbot when elected pope immediately after the death of his predecessor, Stephen IV (V), on Jan. 26, 817. During his pontificate Paschal was continually concerned with the relation
- Paschal II (pope)
Paschal II was the pope from 1099 to 1118. He entered a monastery as a boy and was made cardinal by Pope St. Gregory VII about 1080. He was legate to Spain under Pope Urban II, whom he was elected to succeed on Aug. 13, 1099. Although Paschal fostered the First Crusade and followed Gregory’s great
- Paschal lamb
Paschal lamb, in Judaism, the lamb sacrificed at the first Passover, on the eve of the Exodus from Egypt, the most momentous event in Jewish history. According to the story of the Passover (Exodus, chapter 12), the Jews marked their doorposts with the blood of the lamb, and this sign spared them
- paschal moon (religious calendar date)
Easter: The date of Easter and its controversies: …14th day of the first full moon of spring, 14 Nisan (see Jewish calendar). The Resurrection, then, was observed two days later, on 16 Nisan, regardless of the day of the week. In the West the Resurrection of Jesus was celebrated on the first day of the week, Sunday, when…
- Paschasius Radbertus, Saint (French monk and writer)
Saint Paschasius Radbertus ; feast day April 26) was a French abbot, theologian, and author whose monograph De corpore et sanguine Christi (“Concerning Christ’s Body and Blood”) later became the dominant interpretation of the Eucharist. Abandoned as an infant, Paschasius was raised by the monks of
- Paschen series (physics)
spectral line series: …the United States and Friedrich Paschen of Germany. The Lyman series lies in the ultraviolet, whereas the Paschen, Brackett, and Pfund series lie in the infrared. Their formulas are similar to Balmer’s except that the constant term is the reciprocal of the square of 1, 3, 4, or 5, instead…
- Paschke, Ed (American artist)
Ed Paschke was an American artist affiliated with the Chicago Imagists and known for his confrontational, colourful paintings, many of which depict society’s marginal figures and make reference to pop culture, often in a highly sexualized or grotesque manner. Paschke found his earliest inspiration
- Paschke, Edward Francis, Jr. (American artist)
Ed Paschke was an American artist affiliated with the Chicago Imagists and known for his confrontational, colourful paintings, many of which depict society’s marginal figures and make reference to pop culture, often in a highly sexualized or grotesque manner. Paschke found his earliest inspiration
- paścimadharma (Buddhism)
mappō, in Japanese Buddhism, the age of the degeneration of the Buddha’s law, which some believe to be the current age in human history. Ways of coping with the age of mappō were a particular concern of Japanese Buddhists during the Kamakura period (1192–1333) and were an important factor in the
- Pascin, Jules (Bulgarian-born American painter)
Jules Pascin was a Bulgarian-born American painter, renowned for his delicate draftsmanship and sensitive studies of women. Born of Italian Serbian and Spanish Jewish parents, Pascin was educated in Vienna before he moved to Munich, where he attended art school in 1903. Beginning in 1904, his
- Pasco (Washington, United States)
Pasco, city, seat (1889) of Franklin county, southeastern Washington, U.S., situated at the confluence of the Snake and Columbia rivers, opposite Kennewick and immediately southeast of Richland. Established on the site of a prehistoric Indian village in 1880, when the Northern Pacific Railway (now
- Pasco Knot (plateau, Peru)
Andes Mountains: Physiography of the Central Andes: The Pasco Knot is a large, high plateau. To the west it is bounded by the Cordillera Huarochirí, on the west slope of which the Rímac River rises in a cluster of lakes fed by glaciers and descends rapidly to the ocean (15,700 feet in 60…
- Pasco-Kennewick Bridge (bridge, Washington, United States)
cable-stayed bridge: The Pasco-Kennewick Bridge (1978) over the Columbia River in Washington state supported its centre span of 294 metres (981 feet) from two double concrete towers, the cables fanning down to the concrete deck on either side of the roadway. The same designers created the East End…
- Pascoaes, Teixeira de (Portuguese poet-philosopher)
Teixeira de Pascoaes was a Portuguese poet-philosopher who attempted to create a cult of nationalistic mystique based on saudade (“yearning”; an overtone in Portuguese and Brazilian lyric poetry that fuses hope and nostalgia). His work, together with that of António Nobre, was at the core of the
- Pascoe, Sophie (New Zealand swimmer)
Sophie Pascoe is a New Zealand swimmer and the country’s most successful Paralympian, having won a total of 19 Paralympic medals. She has competed in four Paralympic Games, a major international sports competition for athletes with disabilities comparable to the Olympic Games. For Paralympic
- Pascoe, Sophie Frances (New Zealand swimmer)
Sophie Pascoe is a New Zealand swimmer and the country’s most successful Paralympian, having won a total of 19 Paralympic medals. She has competed in four Paralympic Games, a major international sports competition for athletes with disabilities comparable to the Olympic Games. For Paralympic
- Pascoli, Giovanni (Italian poet)
Giovanni Pascoli was an Italian classical scholar and poet whose graceful and melancholy Italian lyric poems, perfect in form, rhythmic in style, and innovative in wording, were an important influence on the crepuscolari (“twilight poets”; see crepuscolarismo). Pascoli had an extremely painful
- Pascon agan Arluth (Cornish drama)
Cornish literature: …Lord”; also called in English Mount Calvary), about Christ’s suffering and Crucifixion, was written in the 14th century. Literature in Middle Cornish otherwise takes the form of lengthy religious plays produced for popular audiences and performed in the open. These are in verse, typically consisting of four- and seven-syllable lines,…
- Pascua, Isla de (island, Chile)
Easter Island, Chilean dependency in the eastern Pacific Ocean. It is the easternmost outpost of the Polynesian island world. It is famous for its giant stone statues. The island stands in isolation 1,200 miles (1,900 km) east of Pitcairn Island and 2,200 miles (3,540 km) west of Chile. Forming a
- pascuita (plant)
spurge: Major species: …is native, is the shrub pascuita (E. leucocephala), 1.5 to 4 metres (5 to 13 feet) tall, which is covered much of the winter with a mist of small white bracts. In some varieties the leaves are dark red. The scarlet plume (E. fulgens), from Mexico, a 90-cm- (3-foot-) tall…
- Pasdaran (Iranian armed forces)
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), the most powerful branch of the Iranian armed forces, independent of Iran’s regular army and accountable only to the Office of the Supreme Leader. It was established by Ruhollah Khomeini, Iran’s first leader (1979–89), and strengthened under the presidency
- pase de la firma
bullfighting: Act three: …of the faena, and the pase de la firma, in which the muleta is moved in front of the bull’s nose while the bullfighter remains motionless. Especially noteworthy is the left-handed natural, a simple but dangerous pass performed with the muleta held to the matador’s right: the sword is not…
- Pasek, Jan Chryzostom (Polish diarist)
Jan Chryzostom Pasek was a Polish soldier best remembered for his memoirs, which provide an excellent example of Polish Baroque prose. Pasek received some education in a Jesuit school. He enlisted in the army at age 19, seeing service against the Swedes in Poland, with the Danes against the Swedes
- Pasenow oder die Romantik 1888 (novel by Broch)
The Sleepwalkers: …oder die Romantik 1888 (1931; The Romantic), Esch oder die Anarchie 1903 (1931; The Anarchist), and Huguenau oder die Sachlichkeit 1918 (1932; The Realist).
- paseo (dance step and cadence)
Latin American dance: Folk and popular dances: …the musical measure), called the paseo, or a quick 6 8 cadence (i.e., a compound metre having two three-part beats to the measure), called the zapateado (rhythmic stamping). The flexed hips and knees of the asentado body position made zapateado easier to do. The dance opened with a brief promenade…
- paseo (dance section)
Latin American dance: Folk and popular dances: …or introduction, often included a paseo de salida (a side-by-side promenade of the space) with a vuelta y colocación (a turn and getting into position). The next section consisted of an adorno (an improvisation of the dancers’ favourite steps). The final phase of the dances was the exaltación, which included…
- paseo de salida (dance section)
Latin American dance: Folk and popular dances: …or introduction, often included a paseo de salida (a side-by-side promenade of the space) with a vuelta y colocación (a turn and getting into position). The next section consisted of an adorno (an improvisation of the dancers’ favourite steps). The final phase of the dances was the exaltación, which included…
- PASGT (body armor)
armour: Modern body armour systems: Army developed the Personnel Armor System for Ground Troops (PASGT), which was composed of a newly designed Kevlar helmet and a Kevlar vest. Although the vest weighed 9 pounds (4 kg), slightly more than the M-1969 vest it replaced, it provided superior protection against shell fragments. In 2003,…
- pasha (Turkish title)
pasha, title of a man of high rank or office in the Ottoman Empire and North Africa. It was the highest official title of honour in the Ottoman Empire, always used with a proper name, which it followed. It was given to soldiers and high civil officials, not to men of religion, and was purely
- Pasha, Goltz (Prussian military officer)
Colmar, baron von der Goltz was a Prussian soldier, military teacher, and writer. He was an imperial German field marshal who reorganized the Turkish army (1883–96), and who served as commander in chief of Turkish forces against the British in Mesopotamia (Iraq) during World War I. Despite his
- Pasha, Ragib Mehmed (Ottoman vizier)
Mustafa III: …and his able grand vizier, Ragib Mehmed Pasha, understood the necessity for reform, their efforts were directed toward the results, not the causes, of the Ottoman decline. They were unable to curb tax abuses; hence, their fiscal reforms proved ineffective. Administrative reforms foundered on the central government’s inability to extend…
- Pasha, Slatin (governor of The Sudan)
Rudolf Karl, baron von Slatin was an Austrian soldier in the service of England in the Sudan, famous for his imprisonment by the Mahdists (religious and nationalist revolutionaries in the Sudan) and his subsequent escape. His nearly 40 years in the Sudan indelibly influenced its development. Slatin
- Pashinyan, Nikol (prime minister of Armenia)
Nikol Pashinyan is an Armenian journalist and politician who serves as prime minister of Armenia (2018– ). He rose to power in 2018 on a wave of popular discontent against the ruling party, an event that he dubbed the “Velvet Revolution.” He became the subject of popular ire, however, after Armenia
- pashm (animal fibre)
cashmere, animal-hair fibre forming the downy undercoat of the Kashmir goat and belonging to the group of textile fibres called specialty hair fibres. Although the word cashmere is sometimes incorrectly applied to extremely soft wools, only the product of the Kashmir goat is true cashmere. The
- Pashmakli (Bulgaria)
Smolyan, town, southern Bulgaria, on the Cherna River in the southeastern Rhodope Mountains. Its elevation, 3,300 feet (1,000 metres), makes it the highest town in Bulgaria. It is a local agricultural centre, with a timber industry and, more recently, mining. It is picturesquely located among
- pashmina (animal fibre)
cashmere, animal-hair fibre forming the downy undercoat of the Kashmir goat and belonging to the group of textile fibres called specialty hair fibres. Although the word cashmere is sometimes incorrectly applied to extremely soft wools, only the product of the Kashmir goat is true cashmere. The
- Pashto language
Pashto language, member of the Iranian division of the Indo-Iranian group of Indo-European languages. Extensive borrowing has caused Pashto to share many features of the Indo-Aryan group of the Indo-European languages as well. Originally spoken by the Pashtun people, Pashto became the national
- Pashtu language
Pashto language, member of the Iranian division of the Indo-Iranian group of Indo-European languages. Extensive borrowing has caused Pashto to share many features of the Indo-Aryan group of the Indo-European languages as well. Originally spoken by the Pashtun people, Pashto became the national
- Pashtun (people)
Pashtun, ethnolinguistic group residing primarily in the region that lies between the Hindu Kush in northeastern Afghanistan and the northern stretch of the Indus River in Pakistan. The Pashtun constitute the largest ethnic group of the population of Afghanistan and bore the exclusive name of
- Pashtunistan (region, Asia)
Afghanistan: Mohammad Zahir Shah (1933–73): The “Pashtunistan” problem regarding the political status of those Pashtun living on the British (Pakistani) side of the Durand Line developed after the independence of Pakistan in 1947.
- Pashtunwali (social code)
Afghanistan: Informal institutions and justice: …Pashtun tribal law, known as Pashtunwali. With the advent of the Taliban, Islamic courts and an Islamic administration of justice through interpretation of the law by clergy (ʿulamāʾ) assumed greater prominence. These changes have widely replaced the authority once exercised by traditional local leaders, or khans.
- Pashupata (Hindu sect)
Pashupata, perhaps the earliest Hindu sect to worship the god Shiva as the supreme deity. It gave rise in turn to numerous subsects that flourished in Gujarat and Rajasthan, at least until the 12th century, and also travelled to Java and Cambodia. The sect takes its name from Pashupati, an epithet
- Pashupati (Nepal)
Pashupati, town, central Nepal, situated in the Kāthmāndu Valley on the Bāghmati River, just east of Kāthmāndu. Regarded as the holiest place in Nepal, it is the site of an ancient Śaivite (i.e., devoted to the Hindu god Śiva) temple of Paśupatinātha (Pashupatinath). The temple is built in pagoda
- Pashupati (Hindu deity)
Hinduism: Shaivism: …were active among humankind: as Pashupati (“Lord of Cattle”), he took over the fetters of the Vedic Varuna; as Aghora (“To Whom Nothing Is Horrible”), he showed the uncanny traits of his nature (evil, death, punishment) and also their opposites.
- Pashupatinath (temple, Nepal)
Pashupatinath Temple, place of worship in the Kathmandu Valley on the Baghmati River, on the eastern outskirts of the city of Kathmandu, that is the holiest site in Nepal. It is devoted to the Hindu god Shiva in his form as Pashupati, protector of animals. There has been a religious foundation here
- Pashupatinath Temple (temple, Nepal)
Pashupatinath Temple, place of worship in the Kathmandu Valley on the Baghmati River, on the eastern outskirts of the city of Kathmandu, that is the holiest site in Nepal. It is devoted to the Hindu god Shiva in his form as Pashupati, protector of animals. There has been a religious foundation here
- Pašić, Nikola (prime minister of Serbia)
Nikola Pašić was the prime minister of Serbia (1891–92, 1904–05, 1906–08, 1909–11, 1912–18) and prime minister of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes (1918, 1921–24, 1924–26). He was one of the founders, in 1918, of the kingdom that would later (from 1929 to 2003) be called Yugoslavia.
- Pasig River (river, Philippines)
Pasig River, river draining Laguna de Bay, the largest lake in the Philippines, into Manila Bay at Manila. It flows north-northwest through the market town of Pasig and bisects Manila, then enters the bay between the North and South harbors. Its length is 14 miles (23 km). The wharves and quays at
- Pasinetti, Francesco (Italian filmmaker)
Francesco Pasinetti was an Italian motion picture director, historian, critic, comedy writer, screenwriter, and film scholar. At age 19, Pasinetti began writing film criticism for a Venetian newspaper. In 1933, having submitted the first Italian thesis on the topic of motion pictures, he received a
- Pasion (Greek banker)
metic: …a character in Plato’s Republic; Pasion, a metic and former slave, became a great Athenian banker of the 4th century bc.
- pasión prohibida, Una (short stories by Peri Rossi)
Cristina Peri Rossi: …collection Una pasión prohibida (1986; A Forbidden Passion). La tarde del dinosaurio (1976; “The Afternoon of the Dinosaur”) is a volume of stories with a prologue by Cortázar. Witty El museo de los esfuerzos inútiles (1983; The Museum of Useless Efforts) is another book of stories about estrangement. Her novels…
- Pasión River (river, Guatemala)
Usumacinta River: …by the junction of the Pasión River, which arises in the Sierra de Santa Cruz (in Guatemala), and the Chixoy River, which descends from the Sierra Madre de Guatemala.
- Pasión según San Marcos, La (work by Golijov)
Osvaldo Golijov: …2000 Golijov received acclaim for La Pasión según San Marcos (“St. Mark’s Passion”), a Latin American setting of the Passion commissioned by the Bach Academy in Stuttgart, Germany, to commemorate the 250th anniversary of Johann Sebastian Bach’s death. Upshaw sang and recorded Ayre (2004), a cycle that included Arab, Hebrew,…
- Pasionaria, La (Spanish political leader)
Dolores Ibárruri was a Spanish Communist leader, who earned a legendary reputation as an impassioned orator during the Spanish Civil War, coining the Republican battle cry, “No pasarán! ” (“They shall not pass!”). Born the eighth of 11 children of a Viscayan miner, Ibárruri was compelled by poverty
- Pasiphae (Greek mythology)
Minotaur: It was the offspring of Pasiphae, the wife of Minos, and a snow-white bull sent to Minos by the god Poseidon for sacrifice. Minos, instead of sacrificing it, kept it alive; Poseidon as a punishment made Pasiphae fall in love with it. Her child by the bull was shut up…
- Pasiphae (astronomy)
Jupiter: Other satellites: group—made up of Ananke, Carme, Pasiphae, and Sinope— has retrograde orbits around Jupiter. The closer group—Leda, Himalia, Lysithea, and Elara—has prograde orbits. (In the case of these moons, retrograde motion is in the direction opposite to Jupiter’s spin and motion around the Sun, which are counterclockwise as viewed
- Pasiteles (Greek sculptor)
Pasiteles was a Greek sculptor notable for having written a book, in five volumes, about works of art throughout the world. None of Pasiteles’ own sculpture has survived. Little is known about Pasiteles. He was born in a Greek city in southern Italy and became a Roman citizen in 90/89. He made an
- Pasithea (Greek mythology)
Hypnos: …his services, Hypnos is given Pasithea, one of the Graces, to wed. In Book XVI of the Iliad, Hypnos and Thanatos carry the body of Sarpedon home to Lycia after he is slain by Patroclus, a scene depicted in the 6th century bc by the Greek artist Euphronius and others.
- Paskevich, Ivan Fyodorovich, Graf Yerevansky, Knyaz Varshchavsky (Russian military officer)
Ivan Fyodorovich Paskevich was a military officer and administrator in the Russian government who suppressed the Polish insurrection of 1830–31. Having entered the Russian Army through the imperial institution for pages in 1800, Paskevich gained combat experience fighting against the Turks
- Pasmore (novel by Storey)
David Storey: …power in a homosexual relationship; Pasmore (1972), on the regeneration of a man who had given himself up for lost; and Saville (1976, Booker Prize), an autobiographical account of the breaking away of a coal miner’s son from village life. Later novels include A Prodigal Child (1982), Present Times (1984),…
- PASO (international organization)
Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), organization founded in December 1902 to improve health conditions in North and South America. The organization, which is headquartered in Washington, D.C., is the oldest international health agency in the world and was the first international organization
- paso de brabante (dance)
saltarello, medieval and Renaissance court dance and a folk dance of present-day Rome. In the 14th century the saltarello followed the estampie as an afterdance; a few examples survive in manuscript. In the 15th century it followed the basse danse and was sometimes called paso de brabante. It was
- paso doble (music and dance)
bullfighting: Act one: …a spirited bullring march (paso doble); many pasos dobles have been written in honour of and named after famous matadors. The spectacle begins with a trumpeter blowing a fanfare and the opening of a large gate at one end of the arena. One or two mounted bailiffs (alguaciles) in…
- Paso, Fernando del (Mexican author and artist)
Fernando del Paso was a Mexican novelist and artist known for his long, experimental, often humorous novels covering the breadth and history of Mexican culture. After studying biology and economics at the National University of Mexico, del Paso published Sonetos de lo diario (1958; “Everyday
- Pasoeroean (Indonesia)
Pasuruan, city, East Java (Jawa Timur) propinsi (or provinsi; province), Java, Indonesia. It is situated on Madura Strait. The Dutch first established a fort at Pasuruan in 1707. It was the capital of a residency from 1811 to 1934, which, by transferring to Malang in 1934, precipitated the
- PASOK (political party, Greece)
Panhellenic Socialist Movement (PASOK), social democratic political party in Greece. The Panhellenic Socialist Movement (PASOK) was founded in 1974 as a radical Marxist-inspired party that called for the dissolution of the country’s military alliances and for tighter government regulation of the
- Pasolini, Pier Paolo (Italian author and director)
Pier Paolo Pasolini was an Italian motion-picture director, poet, and novelist, noted for his socially critical, stylistically unorthodox films. The son of an Italian army officer, Pasolini was educated in schools of the various cities of northern Italy where his father was successively posted. He
- pasos perdidos, Los (work by Carpentier y Valmont)
Alejo Carpentier: …novel Los pasos perdidos (1953; The Lost Steps), his best-known work, is the first-person account of a character who travels to the Orinoco jungle in search of the meaning of life and the origins of time.